Thursday, 7 November 2013

Consciousness Beyond the Individual

"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary
explanations." said Dr Stephen Law in his opening address; I've noticed
that Skeptics like to reuse witticisms until long after they become cliches.
Amazingly they still sometimes get a laugh off them. I was waiting for him to
say: "It's good to be open-minded, but not so open-minded your brain falls
out", but to his credit, Law resisted that temptation. Wherever Carl
Sagan's daemon is in the Spiritworld,
it's probably seeking a good copyright lawyer. I was in the audience at an
event called Consciousness Beyond the Individual organized by the Journal of Wild Culture, see: http://wildculture-conscious.eventbrite.co.uk/.
The subject matter under discussion was whether our experience of self-awareness
is limited to individual physical brain function, or is some other process
involved?

This is not a new question, in fact it's one of the oldest
in the world. It appears in some of the most ancient written records man has
published and was most likely a common campfire conundrum in prehistoric times.
Where does the sense of "I" come from? The notion that a person knows
they exist and can sense their own presence in the universe. It raises paradoxical
questions like: "Did you have any sense of self before you existed?";
this was actually posed to me by another audience member. We also have to ask
what else has consciousness apart from a human? Do other animal species also
have it? Do plants? Do very advanced computers? The event took place at the
Swedenborg Hall in the West End of London, see: http://www.swedenborg.org.uk/events.
Emmanuel Swedenborg was a mystical philosopher and theologian; as his name
suggests, he was Swedish, and the question of consciousness was one he addressed
strongly in his work. The event was a debate between three Skeptics and
three... what do I call them?... believers?...
Already we're faced once more with this subroutine of working out exactly what
a "Skeptic" is; I address this in detail here, see: http://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.co.uk/2012/07/programme-5-podcast-skeptics.html.
For the convenience of this article let's define a Skeptic as simply somebody
who thinks the answer to the question of consciousness is materialism, that it
can be found in the function of the physical brain. It is produced by electrical
brain activity and is dependent on it; it begins once the brain is developed
enough to function and ends forever at the point of death when the brain stops
functioning. The three Skeptics were Jane Aspell, a cognitive neuroscientist
from RuskinUniversity
(Not to be confused with RuskinCollege,
Oxford). The aforementioned Stephen
Law is a philosophy lecturer and editor of the Philosophical journal Think; he has had dealings with HPANWO before,
see: http://hpanwo.blogspot.co.uk/2011/09/british-humanist-association-conspiracy.html.
The third member in the Skeptic corner was Deborah Hyde who has also featured
in a HPANWO report previously, see: http://hpanwo.blogspot.co.uk/2011/11/london-skeptics-in-pub-141111.html.
On the "believers" side... again this is a term I'm using for
expediency alone, was somebody HPANWO Radio-listeners will be very familiar
with, Anthony Peake, see: http://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/programme-62-podcast-anthony-peake.html.
He was accompanied by Raymond Tallis, a doctor, neuroscientist and poet, the
perfect answer to any Skeptic who dares to suggest that the only people who
disagree with materialism are not scientifically qualified to study the brain.
The last in the line up was a man called Graham Nicholls who has experienced
multiple out-of-body states; he has written about them and studied them
extensively.

The debate began with a six-minute statement from each
speaker. Jane Aspell explained from that start that she is a materialist; she
is absolutely convinced that all mental states can be simply explained by the
shuffling of electrochemicals in the neuropile. Deborah Hyde agreed, despite
the fact that she herself has experienced many astral states, including an OBE
where she saw her dead mother, and her many periods of sleep paralysis (I
myself have experienced sleep paralysis and must write some more about that at
another time). She thinks that these various altered states, including the
Near-Death Experience, are connected and all related to different types of
brain states. Raymond Tallis begged to differ and described himself as
"more sceptic than the Skeptics". For him, one doesn't need to dig
down to the esoterica of NDE's and OBE's to find amazing and incomprehensible
facts; the very act of looking at and thinking about an object beyond oneself,
like the glass on the table in front of him, should theoretically not be
possible in the universe we live in. Anthony Peake agreed with Tallis, but he
additionally pointed out some of the flaws in materialistic logic. Obviously
when one person sees something and nobody else does that makes it easy to
dismiss it as a "hallucination" for that reason, yet when two people
see it the Skeptics dismiss it as a folie
a deux- "madness shared by two"; when a group of people see it
then it's called a "mass delusion". What Anthony was actually
describing is a common fallacy, as well as method of distortion and suppression
called "raising of the bar", and unfortunately many Skeptics use it,
as I describe in the link above to my HPANWO Radio Skeptic special and also
this HPANWO Forum thread, see: http://hpanwoforum.freeforums.org/the-hpanwo-guide-to-being-a-forum-skep-dick-t912.html.
Graham Nicholls has had OBE's since the age of twelve, including ones when he's
awake. He has recorded the details and done several experiments to find out if
they can be verified by other people, in a similar vein to Robert Monroe, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CBii06UyWwY.

The reason this subject has become more and more popular in
recent years is because of the enormous progress neuroscience made has over the
course of the 20th century, and so far in the 21st century too. The
materialistic theory of consciousness may well date back to when a caveman
first cracked open the skull of a dead body with a stone axe and looked at what
lay within, yet in recent years this three-pound walnut-shaped blob of flesh
inside our heads has been thoroughly examined and many of its workings identified.
The original hope was that this campaign of research would eventually lead to
the discovery of the "I-module" or the organ in the brain which has specifically
evolved to produce consciousness. This organ has never been found, and Skeptics
have had to take an entirely different course to uphold their theory. For
example the Skeptic Daniel Dennett has even doubted the existence of
consciousness at all and that it is merely an illusion; "in which case who
writes his books?" quipped Anthony. See here for Dennett's hypothesis in
his own words: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kn9a6_nycng.
The Skeptic end of the stage thought the way forward was simply to do better
neuroscience of the conventional and established kind, however Anthony and his two
comrades are proposing an entirely fresh approach to resolve this impasse caused
by what Tallis called quite frankly the "limitations of neuroscience".
The Skeptics are convinced that there is not enough evidence to justify any fresh
approach, and even that such evidence is "non-existent" as Jane
Aspell said. Stephen Law said that all reports of psi- psychic phenomena, are
anecdotal; they're nothing more than an unsubstantiated fable that one person
tells another. Graham Nicholls strongly disagreed; properly-controlled
scientific experiments have been done and have yielded positive results. When
the Q and A session began a man spoke from the audience who I later discovered directed
this film: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQvQ_WTtdHk.
He's producing a new movie about the evidence for the afterlife. Anthony Peake
has his own unique ideas about what the afterlife entails, as you'll hear if
you listen to his interview above; oddly enough he shares a lot of the
Skeptics' misgivings over NDE's. This has attracted a lot of flak from the more
mainstream non-Skeptic NDE research community as well as the Skeptics
themselves. As Anthony puts it himself, he's on a bridge being shot at from
both sides. When my turn came to put my hand up I asked what effect a
generally-accepted revelation of this information would have on human culture.
None of the speakers answered me in detail; to be fair, it is a big subject. My
own concern is that the various psychological think tanks which assess every
new invention and discovery for its impact on society may well already know
that the afterlife exists and could be perpetrating a cover-up; I'll have to
speak about this in more detail in another article.

The debate lasted two hours, but it felt like half that
time. I'm very grateful to all the organizers and to all the speakers for
coming along, especially Anthony Peake. It was an interesting evening, but also
a very strange one. I was supposed to meet my good friend and fellow researcher
Heidi King earlier in the afternoon, but through a bizarre misunderstanding we
went to two different places. We agreed to meet at a branch of Caffe Nero, but
not the same one! After we both waited for ages in both wrong places, we headed
for the venue independently, wondering if the other was coming after all. Luckily
we met up there and explained. Maybe part of the problem is that there are too
many Caffe Neros in the land, but could something more be going on? I'm not an
enthusiast for astrology, but Ustane is and she made me aware a while ago that
the planet Mercury was reversing its direction on the celestial sphere, it's
called "retrograde Mercury". Astrologers say that the effects of a retrograde
Mercury are problems with communication, arrangments and technical breakdowns, especially
with electronics and telephones. I didn't take this seriously when Ustane first
told me this, but since the Mercury retrograde began on the 21st of last month
I have indeed had a number of difficulties in those areas. My latest film Notts Roswell wouldn't upload properly at
Ustane's place and I had to wait until I get home to do it, see: http://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/notts-roswell.html,
then a HPANWO Radio show crashed, see: http://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/programme-66-stephen-bassett.html.
When I did a test show on the station the following day to find out what went
wrong the system completely messed up Ustane's computer, forcing me to carry
out a system restore on it which took all morning. This has led to me permanently
changing my HPANWO Radio schedule. Could this evening's mix-up with Heidi be a
part of that same Mercury retrograde? If so then I'm glad to say it ends soon,
on the tenth, see: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/larry-schwimmer/top-10-things-not-to-do-d_b_4133136.html.

4 comments:

Enjoyed the article Ben, thanks. It always strikes me as somewhat topsy-turvy, and saying something about the present state of humanity, when so many vociferous skeptics are female these days. 'Left-brained' has for so long been the accusation pointed towards males by females. I'd also like to hear what explanation those materialists offer (more like 'insist', sadly)for the drawings and non-human finger marks that are left on experiencers' bodies after encounters.

For me the work done by the late Dr John Lorber and documented in the medical literature is conclusive proof that the materialist are wrong. The brain does not generate consciousness and Lorber saw over 100 people in the UK who were born without brains this is called extreme hydrancephaly:

“I think biologists tend to ignore the discoveries in physics because they interfere with their ideas. Observation creates matter and the brain is made of matter. Consciousness is required for observation for it to create the matter from which the brain is formed.The brain, being made of matter, could not have come first because there would have been no observation to create the particles that form the brain.”Pierre Lapin

Ellis, they have an answer for that of course! They have an answer for everything! No matter how outrageous and unlikely Skeptic explanations get they'll always insist it's "common sense" and "more rational"! Glad you liked the article, mate. Thanks.

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